1st San Marine Cabinet

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The 1st San Marinese cabinet after the end of fascism was in office from July 28th to September 16th, 1943.

After Mussolini was deposed on July 25, 1943, leading opposition figures demanded the resignation of the fascist government of San Marino. The Capitani Reggente Michelotti and Manzoni Borghesi then declared the fascist party on July 26 and the fascist parliament, the Principe e Sovrano Consiglio dei LX , dissolved on July 28 . A new government (Consiglio di Stato) was appointed, in a first step 17 members who, in their first meeting, responded to a group of young citizens' demand for further patriotic elements to be represented in the government and appointed a further 13 members. Parliamentary elections were scheduled for September 5, 1943.

The original 17 members
Fausto Amadori
Francesco Balsimelli
Marino Cardelli
Alvaro Casali
Cesare Cesarini
Giuseppe Forcellini
Augusto Foschi
Pio Galassi
Gino Giacomini
Remy Giacomini
Bernardino Graziani
Sante Lonfernini
Teodoro Lonfernini
Marco Marcucci
Claudio Wilson Reffi
Vincenzo Terenzi
Luigi Tonnini
Sanzio Valentini
the other 13 members
Marino Arzilli
Gustavo Babboni
Marino Belluzzi
Federico Bigi
Aldo Busignani
Alfonso Ceccoli
Giuseppe Filippi
Romano Michelotti
Giuseppe Molaroni
Antonio Morganti
Bruno Reffi
Enea Suzzi Valli
Leonida Suzzi Valli

On July 29th, the Consiglio di Stato appointed a congress for ordinary administration (Congresso per l'ordinaria amministrazione) to which in addition to the two Capitani reggents another 8 members belonged.

Marino Arzilli
Francesco Balsimelli
Marino Belluzzi
Federico Bigi
Giuseppe Forcellini
Teodoro Lonfernini
Antonio Morganti
Sanzio Valentini

On July 30th, Giuseppe Forcellini was appointed Interior Minister ( Segretario di Stato per gli Affari Interni ) and Gustavo Babboni as Foreign Minister ( Segretario di Stato per gli Affari Esteri ).

literature

  • Domenico Gasperoni: I Governi di San Marino. Storia e personaggi. AIEP Editore, Serravalle 2015, ISBN 978-88-6086-118-4 , pp. 152-155.

Remarks

  1. Gasperoni is inconsistent there. On p. 153 he speaks of 17 members, but then lists 18 members in the table on p. 154, then speaks of 13 further members, but of a total of 30 members. The table with 18 original members was taken from Gasperoni, so that a total of 31 members are listed here.